`description` has been documented as soft-deprecated since 1.27.0 (17
months ago). There is no longer any reason to call it or implement it.
This commit:
- adds #[rustc_deprecated(since = "1.41.0")] to Error::description;
- moves description (and cause, which is also deprecated) below the
source and backtrace methods in the Error trait;
- reduces documentation of description and cause to take up much less
vertical real estate in rustdocs, while preserving the example that
shows how to render errors without needing to call description;
- removes the description function of all *currently unstable* Error
impls in the standard library;
- marks #[allow(deprecated)] the description function of all *stable*
Error impls in the standard library;
- replaces miscellaneous uses of description in example code and the
compiler.
Fix up Command Debug output when arg0 is specified.
PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/66512 added the ability to set argv[0] on
Command. As a side effect, it changed the Debug output to print both the program and
argv[0], which in practice results in stuttery output (`"echo" "echo" "foo"`).
This PR reverts the behaviour to the the old one, so that the command is only printed
once - unless arg0 has been set. In that case it emits `"[command]" "arg0" "arg1" ...`.
std: Implement `LineWriter::write_vectored`
This commit implements the `write_vectored` method of the `LineWriter`
type. First discovered in bytecodealliance/wasmtime#629 the
`write_vectored` method of `Stdout` bottoms out here but only ends up
writing the first buffer due to the default implementation of
`write_vectored`.
Like `BufWriter`, however, `LineWriter` can have a non-default
implementation of `write_vectored` which tries to preserve the
vectored-ness as much as possible. Namely we can have a vectored write
for everything before the newline and everything after the newline if
all the stars align well.
Also like `BufWriter`, though, special care is taken to ensure that
whenever bytes are written we're sure to signal success since that
represents a "commit" of writing bytes.
PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/66512 added the ability to set argv[0] on
Command. As a side effect, it changed the Debug output to print both the program and
argv[0], which in practice results in stuttery output ("echo echo foo").
This PR reverts the behaviour to the the old one, so that the command is only printed
once - unless arg0 has been set. In that case it emits "[command] arg0 arg1 ...".
Delete flaky test net::tcp::tests::fast_rebind
This test is unreliable for at least 3 users on two platforms: see #57509 and #51006. It was added 5 years ago in #22015. Do we know whether this is testing something important that would indicate a bug in our implementation, or if it's fine to remove?
r? @sfackler @alexcrichton because this somewhat resembles #59018Closes#57509. Closes#51006.
Require stable/unstable annotations for the constness of all stable fns with a const modifier
r? @RalfJung @Centril
Every `#[stable]` const fn now needs either a `#[rustc_const_unstable]` attribute or a `#[rustc_const_stable]` attribute. You can't silently stabilize the constness of a function anymore.
SGX: Change ELF entrypoint
This fixes [rust-sgx issue #148](https://github.com/fortanix/rust-sgx/issues/148).
A new entry point is created for the ELF file generated by `rustc`, separate from the enclave entry point. When the ELF file is executed as a Linux binary, the error message below is written to stderr.
> Error: This file is an SGX enclave which cannot be executed as a standard Linux binary.
> See the installation guide at https://edp.fortanix.com/docs/installation/guide/ on how to use 'cargo run' or follow the steps at https://edp.fortanix.com/docs/tasks/deployment/ for manual deployment.
When the ELF file is converted to an SGXS using `elf2sgxs`, the old entry point is still set as the enclave entry point. In a future pull request in the rust-sgx repository, `elf2sgxs` will be modified to remove the code in the ELF entry point, since this code is not needed in the enclave.
This commit implements the `write_vectored` method of the `LineWriter`
type. First discovered in bytecodealliance/wasmtime#629 the
`write_vectored` method of `Stdout` bottoms out here but only ends up
writing the first buffer due to the default implementation of
`write_vectored`.
Like `BufWriter`, however, `LineWriter` can have a non-default
implementation of `write_vectored` which tries to preserve the
vectored-ness as much as possible. Namely we can have a vectored write
for everything before the newline and everything after the newline if
all the stars align well.
Also like `BufWriter`, though, special care is taken to ensure that
whenever bytes are written we're sure to signal success since that
represents a "commit" of writing bytes.
async/await: improve not-send errors, part 2
Part of #64130. Fixes#65667.
This PR improves the errors introduced in #64895 so that they have specialized messages for `Send` and `Sync`.
r? @nikomatsakis
Update hashmap doc
Update hint to the used algorithms. Skimmed over the longer description but could not find another mentioning of the old algorithms.
Closes#67093
Change unused_labels from allow to warn
Fixes#66324, making the unused_labels lint warn instead of allow by default. I'm told @rust-lang/lang will need to review this, and perhaps will want to do a crater run.